I live in a small city here in the Philippines and yes we have, as they are called here Brownouts, a lot of them. Since the first of the year, our longest blackout was a little over 3 days due to downed lines. At least that is what I was told. If you couple this with the fact that many weeks our home is without public utility power for 1 to 2 hours at a time on many days of the week, plus some days we get power interruptions several times during the day.

This can be upsetting to me if I am researching something, be it an article on space exploring, archeology digs around the world or staying in touch with my family and friends. I do not want the stress caused by the loss of power, plus I suffer from sleep apnea (meaning when I lay down to sleep I use a CPAP). A CPAP is a small pump that adds air pressure to my throat and lungs keeping my airway open. Without it loud snoring (rattle the window type), headaches due to not enough air to keep my brain happy, plus increased risk of stroke and heart attack. And the biggy is my poor wife does not get to sleep much.

So I felt countermeasures were really needed, so I used what I had learned while working in electronics in the Navy, and 35 years in Hospitals and came up with an easy fix, at least easy in my mind. Buy a generator to deal with the brownouts, but it is not that easy in this modern day environment. The generator was easy, I found one local, I thought it was new, buyer beware. But it allowed me to get what I needed to have a usable generator at home. 1stI needed a lockout switch (a switch that makes sure I do not back feed power onto the power companies line.) Do not want to hurt someone working on the lines, doing the repair, plus I had a small unit and could not supply the houses around us with power also. 2ndI needed an enclosed area to protect the generator from the weather and my wife’s animals and our pets, small building with a roof. 3rdOur unit was loud and this is when I found out I had purchased a used unit and the gentleman working on the unit told me it was rebuilt but not done well. Worked with it for over a year and gave up-got rid of it. Big lose, money wise but I learned from it. My wife questioned me, why did I want one. And I now know the answer was I did not want to be inconvenienced, even thou I knew I would never run it at night. I do not want to bother my neighbor’s sleep with my noisy generator.

My Generator

So I got another one, this time new and unused. We got a 6 plus KW generator and I figured we could run everything in our home (another lesson learned). I forgot you always get 50% more than what you need at the time of purchase. I should have got the 10+KW unit even though it was over 100,000 pesos, more than double what ours cost. But we have work round’s, 1- the freezer is turned off during brownouts, 2- I do not take hot showers during brownouts, 3- the hot water dispenser is turned off during the brown out. But I can run the A/C if it is hot. And out PCs are on UPS for protection. So it works and the new unit which is now over 3 years old is running great and at night I sleep poorly sitting up or we head to the hotel that has a generator running for brownouts.

Luke

I am almost 71 years old, I retired in 2013 from Adventist Health where I was the Director of Corp. Department of Clinical Engineering for 18 of their Hospitals and my wife and I moved out of California and went to our home in. the Philippines. Over the last 5 years we have had many adventures here in the Islands as well as the world. Relaxing and enjoying life and each others company.

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Hi Luke, Thought I might chime in more for the readers than for you as you seem to have everything under control. But I have 40 years experience in power generation and I would disagree with getting a generator 50% bigger than your needs. That is typically a industrial calculation. You seem to have sized yours just right and save a ton of money. For home use 10 to 15% over average use should be fine if you want to run the entire home. If you are just looking to keep specific equipment running during a brown out like a… Read more »

Great advise, Thank you. But the reason I said 50% more than needed was because my wife and I keep adding devices that need electricity. And after 5 years our usage has gone way up.

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1 month ago

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Paul Thompson

Luke; I left the RP to join a ship in 1999, and left a $1,000.00 for my wife to purchase a HONDA generator. I called from a port we were in and she told me about a six-day brownout she was going through. (Caused by a Typhoon) I asked about the generator and she informed me she used the money to have a dinning room set made. So, I suggested she plug everything into the new table. My next time home I bought the new Honda Generator large enough to run everything. Shut the main breaker from the street and… Read more »

Hi Luke As much as i like living in a warm climate I do find it difficult to tolerate the heat without at least an electric fan. And I find it impossible to sleep without aircon. So brownouts, if prolonged, can be an absolute nightmare. A couple of years ago when we had daily rotating brownouts in Davao, we would even go for intermittent trips in the car to cool down! We have a rechargeable electric fan which helps, but the advertised 4-hour battery running time doesn’t last long, and I have to replace the battery every few months. So… Read more »

Peter just have an electrical put in the by pass breakers and wire it up. Operating the generator today of the size houses need is a cake walk. The store that sells it to you can teach u in about 10 minutes and make sure that they have a local service person that can service and repair it over the years. Easy to run, easier than a car.